Incentives and Student Learning: A Natural Experiment with Economics Problem Sets

6 Pages Posted: 29 Mar 2013 Last revised: 10 Apr 2013

See all articles by Wayne A. Grove

Wayne A. Grove

Le Moyne College - Department of Economics

Tim Wasserman

Syracuse University

Date Written: March 27, 2013

Abstract

More than three decades of intense interest in and scholarship about the determinants of student learning of economics has led to surprisingly few insights about what a typical faculty member can do differently to increase student academic success. Based on data from a natural experiment, we estimate the gains in student cognitive achievement in an introductory economics course due to assigning graded versus non-graded problem sets. We identify statistically significant and meaningful problem set effects for. Graded problem sets raised the average students’ exam performance enough to increase their course GPA by one-third of a letter grade. Hardworking, scholastically below-average students’ receive additional academic achievement. These results offer the typical faculty member strong evidence about a simple way to dramatically improve student learning that they can implement.

Keywords: classroom experiment, homework assignment, student performance

JEL Classification: A22, C93, I21

Suggested Citation

Grove, Wayne A. and Wasserman, Tim, Incentives and Student Learning: A Natural Experiment with Economics Problem Sets (March 27, 2013). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2240316 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2240316

Wayne A. Grove (Contact Author)

Le Moyne College - Department of Economics ( email )

1419 Salt Springs Road
Syraucse, NY 13214

HOME PAGE: http://webserver.lemoyne.edu/grovewa/

Tim Wasserman

Syracuse University ( email )

900 S. Crouse Avenue
Syracuse, NY 13244-2130
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
179
Abstract Views
1,256
Rank
307,587
PlumX Metrics